The Flying Cobras

The Flying Cobras
Top: Former logo at Carowinds. Bottom: The Flying Cobras when it was Head Spin at Geauga Lake
Previously known as The Mind Eraser (1996-2003), Head Spin (2004-2007) at Geauga Lake, and Carolina Cobra (2009-2016)
Carowinds
Park section County Fair
Coordinates 35°06′09″N 80°56′34″W / 35.102582°N 80.942915°W / 35.102582; -80.942915Coordinates: 35°06′09″N 80°56′34″W / 35.102582°N 80.942915°W / 35.102582; -80.942915
Status Operating
Opening date March 28, 2009 (2009-03-28)
Replaced Flying Super Saturator
Geauga Lake
Coordinates 41°20′59″N 81°22′44″W / 41.349632°N 81.378940°W / 41.349632; -81.378940
Status Relocated to Carowinds
Opening date 1996 (1996)
Closing date September 16, 2007 (2007-09-16)
General statistics
Type Steel Shuttle boomerang
Manufacturer Vekoma
Model Boomerang
Lift/launch system Cable and Chain Lift
Height 116.5 ft (35.5 m)
Length 935 ft (285 m)
Speed 47 mph (76 km/h)
Inversions 3 (each traversed twice)
Duration 1:48
Max vertical angle 65°
Capacity 760 riders per hour
G-force 5.2
Height restriction 48 in (122 cm)
Trains Single train with 7 cars. Riders are arranged 2 across in 2 rows for a total of 28 riders per train.
Fast Lane available
The Flying Cobras at RCDB
Pictures of The Flying Cobras at RCDB

The Flying Cobras, formerly known as the Head Spin, Carolina Cobra and The Mind Eraser, is a steel boomerang roller coaster located at Carowinds in Charlotte, North Carolina. Manufactured by Vekoma, The Flying Cobras was the first roller coaster addition to Carowinds following the park's purchase by Cedar Fair in 2006. It originally operated at Geauga Lake from 1996 to 2007 until its relocation to Carowinds in 2008. Following the 2016 season, the roller coaster was refurbished and renamed again in 2017.

History

The Flying Cobras, originally named The Mind Eraser, opened at Geauga Lake in 1996. It was renamed to Head Spin when Cedar Fair purchased Six Flags Worlds of Adventure from Six Flags in 2004. On September 21, 2007, Cedar Fair announced that Geauga Lake & Wildwater Kingdom would no longer operate as an amusement park, and instead become solely a waterpark, Wildwater Kingdom. The ride was moved to Carowinds, where it was renamed to Carolina Cobra. The ride occupies the spot of the Flying Super Saturator roller coaster, which was dismantled and put up for sale after the 2008 season. This was the first roller coaster for Carowinds since the addition of Nighthawk in 2004. On August 18, 2016, Carowinds announced the expansion of County Fair for the 2017 season, which includes refurbishing the Carolina Cobra. It has been renamed The Flying Cobras to pay tribute to the classic air shows that were once seen at the Carolina County Fair.[1]

Ride experience

The Flying Cobras is one of over 50 boomerang coasters installed by Vekoma around the world, but it is the first roller coaster to feature all new re-designed MK-1212 trains directly from Vekoma.[2] After dispatch, the train is pulled backwards up the 125-foot (38 m) lift hill. After that, riders are dropped 120 feet (37 m) down, fly back through the station and into a Cobra Roll element. The riders then are taken through a 360-degree vertical loop and are sent up a second 125-foot (38 m) hill. The riders pause, and are sent down to do the full circuit again backwards.

Incidents

On October 18, 2009, Carolina Cobra's second lift hill failed to catch, resulting in a rollback that couldn't make it back through the second set of inversions [3] The passengers were able to exit the ride onto a nearby platform. All of the passengers were taken to first aid. Seven of the riders were released back into the park; the eighth was taken to a local hospital and examined. No serious injuries were reported.

Ride elements

References

  1. "The Carolina Cobra is getting a makeover with a new name and theme for 2017. Under its new name, The Flying Cobras, it will pay tribute to the classic air shows that one would see at a Carolina County Fair". Facebook.com. Carowinds.
  2. http://carolinacobra.carowinds.com/public/ride/index.cfm#trains Archived 2008-12-17 at the Wayback Machine.
  3. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2009-10-20. Retrieved 2009-10-26.
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